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Showing posts with label Weapons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weapons. Show all posts
This is by far the best weapon I ever had. This is a magazine fed rifle labor in the configuration of the bolt, with detachable magazines, a sniper scope and bi-pod.

The Best Sniper Weapon
The Best Sniper Weapon Ever
You see a pict  that explains what I'm about to say

means "Bolt Action 'every time you want to load a round, you flick the bolt lever, pull back, push back and forth. This will extract a block of 1x4 magazine, pull the" hammer "elastic (), put the brick in the bedroom and snap the elastic on the back of it.

bolt action rifle was one of the first type of rifle and pump action lever. They were used in World War I and World War II, which are reliable and easy to use.
The Best Sniper Weapon
The Best Sniper Weapon Ever
This gun has a range of snipers, are bi-pod and two 8-round magazines. The stand is foldable and removable and attaches to the front of the barrel. When you break your legs are parallel with the barrel.
The sniper scope seems genuine, but when you aim with it, makes you look through a small hole in scope, I could not get real low.

The mechanism is quite simple, and should almost never jams.
A tank is a tracked, armoured fighting vehicle designed for front-line combat which combines operational mobility and tactical offensive and defensive capabilities. Firepower is normally provided by a large-calibre main gun in a rotating turret and secondary machine guns, while heavy armour and all-terrain mobility provide protection for the tank and its crew, allowing it to perform all primary tasks of the armoured troops on the battlefield.[1]
Tanks in World War I were developed separately and simultaneously by Great Britain and France as a means to break the deadlock of trench warfare. Their first use in combat was by the British Army on September 15, 1916 at Flers-Courcelette, during the Battle of the Somme. The name "tank" was adopted in Great Britain during the early stages of their development, as a security measure to conceal their purpose (see Etymology).
Tanks of the interwar period evolved into the designs of World War II. Important concepts of armoured warfare were developed; the Soviet Union launched the first mass tank/air attack at Khalkhin Gol (Nomonhan) in August 1939[2], which later resulted in the T-34, a predecessor of the main battle tank; this was quickly followed up by Germany on a larger scale when they introduced blitzkrieg ('lightning war') less than two weeks later; a technique which made use of massed concentrations of tanks supported by artillery and air power to break through the enemy front and cause a complete collapse in enemy resistance and morale.
Tanks in the Cold War advanced to counter greater battlefield threats. Tanks became larger and their armour became thicker and much more effective. Advances in manufacturing late in the war allowed the mass production of composite armor. Aspects of gun technology changed significantly as well, with advances in shell design.
During the 20th century, main battle tanks were considered a key component of modern armies.[3] In the 21st century, with the increasing role of asymetrical warfare and the end of the Cold War, that also contributed to the increase of cost-effective Russian anti-tank weapons worldwide, the importance of tanks has waned. Modern tanks seldom operate alone, as they are organized into armoured units which involve the support of infantry, who may accompany the tanks in infantry fighting vehicles. They are also usually supported by reconnaissance or ground-attack aircraft.[4]
source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tank

video of the tank :

panzerfaust vs T 34 



Cats in Tanks


Lockheed Martin Has Won a $ 3.93 million contract from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to Develop High-tech rifle-scope attachment. Designed to Improve marksmanship over distances of between three and 600 meters, the Dynamic Image Optic Gunsight (DINGO) system has combined low power laser rangefinder, ballistics year embedded computer and onboard sensors determine wind That and Other environmental effects.
 Based on the One Shot Advanced Sighting System DINGO Calculates the range, digitally zoom in on the target and crosswind Automatically Transmits information to long-range sniper's scope, Modifying the Crosshairs to display the bullet's exact point-of-impact.

Lockheed Martin says the goal Is To Provide Accurate targeting with soldiers while Maintaining optical resolution and the Need to Change Without scopes.
 "Current scopes are optimized for a single target range, Impacting soldiers' Effectiveness and survivability When Engaging targets at different distances DURING a single mission," Said Dan Schultz, vice president and general manager of Lockheed Martin's Mission Systems and Sensors Ship & Aviation Systems business . "Dingo Will solve this problem, Significantly Increasing soldiers' Ability to Rapidly reconfigure optics for use from short to long ranges and Improving Capabilities marksmanship for all soldiers."

The nine-month Phase 1 contract DINGO Will See the System Developed for use on M-4 and M-16 automatic rifles.

Recently Lockheed Martin Also Has Applied The One Shot crosswind measurement technology in a prototype spotter scope. The company says tactical field tests in December 2009 showed sniper That Were Able to Quickly engages targets and have fewer spectators grandir Their probability of a first-round hit by a Factor of Two distances at 1.000 meters Beyond.
If you own an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV), here's piece of advice: do not fly it near San Nicholas Island, California, or It could be blasted out of the sky - by a laser. Two vehicles suche Were Successfully shot down there on May 24th by a U.S. Navy laser weapon. , According to the official press release, this marks "the first detect-thru-engagement laser shoot-down or a threat representative target in an over-the-water combat representative scenario."

Members of the Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) utilized a laser beam shot through a director on a KINETO tracking mount, controlled by a MK 15 Phalanx Close In Weapon System (CIWS). The Navy's Laser Weapon System (Laws) HAS Already shot down UAVs in Other scenarios, Bringing the total number to seven or downed flying robots.
 "The success of this effort validates the military utility of EWS & DE (Directed Energy and Electric Weapon Systems) in a maritime environment," said program manager Capt.. David Kiel. "Further development and integration of increasingly more powerful lasers Writing Surface Navy Laws Will Increase Both the engagement range and target sets, That Can Be Successfully Engaged and Destroyed."

The U.S. Navy is interested in laser weapons Because of Their speed-of-light engagement time, and the cost savings realized by Minimizing the use of missiles.

Laser weapons are Becoming a Reality Also in the air. In testing earlier this year, a modified Boeing 747 Equipped with an airborne laser (ABL) shot down a ballistic missile off the central California coast.
The Missile Defense Agency and U.S. Army soldiers of the 6th Air Defense Artillery Brigade from Fort Bliss, Texas, successfully conducted an intercept test for the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile defense element of the nation's Ballistic Missile Defense System today. A target missile was launched at approximately 9:32 p.m. Hawaii time, June 28 (3:32 a.m. EDT, June 29), and about five minutes later a THAAD interceptor missile was launched from the Pacific Missile Range Facility (PMRF) off the island of Kauai, Hawaii. Preliminary indications are that planned flight test objectives were achieved.

The test involved the intercept of a short-range unitary target in the endoatmosphere (inside the earth's atmosphere). The target, representing a short-range ballistic missile threat, was launched from an at-sea mobile launch platform located in the Pacific Ocean west of Hawaii. Upon acquiring and tracking the target, the THAAD system developed a fire control solution and launched an interceptor missile, which acquired and successfully intercepted the target missile. The intercept occurred at the lowest altitude to date for the THAAD interceptor missile, which has the capability to engage targets both inside and outside the earth's atmosphere.

Soldiers of the 6th Air Defense Artillery Brigade of Fort Bliss, Texas, conducted launcher, fire control and radar operations, using tactics, techniques, and procedures developed by the U.S. Army Air Defense School. Soldiers operating the equipment were not aware of actual target launch time. Also following the engagement, test personnel used the Simulation-Over-Live Driver (SOLD) software system to inject multiple simulated threat scenarios into the THAAD radar. This exercised THAAD's capability to track and engage a mass raid of enemy ballistic missiles.

Several missile defense assets and emerging technologies observed the launch and gathered data for future analysis. Participants included the Command and Control, Battle Management and Communications (C2BMC) system and elements of the U.S. Army's PATRIOT system. The PATRIOT system, located at PMRF, conducted engagement coordination with THAAD and conducted upper tier debris mitigation exercises during the intercept engagement.

This was the seventh successful intercept in seven attempts for the operationally-configured THAAD system. Operational elements of the Ballistic Missile Defense System are currently deployed, protecting the nation, our allies and friends against limited ballistic missile attack. The system continues to undergo development and testing to provide a robust layered defense against ballistic missiles of all ranges in all phases of flight.



BAGHDAD: Soldiers serving on Camp Taji, Iraq, trained Iraqi troops on the fundamentals of marksmanship with the M-16 rifle, June 15. The training was part of a continued effort by the U.S. to phase out the Iraqi Army's use of the Soviet-era AK-47 Kalashnikov assault rifle.

The swap between the two weapons has gun-enthusiasts across the military and social-media sites up-in-arms, as fans of both weapons debate the practicality of the initiative.

The AK-47, which has become symbolic of Middle Eastern militaries, has been used by the Iraqi Army since the 1960s. The weapon is less accurate than the western M-16 rifle, yet its more durable design makes it a more suitable match for a desert climate, critics say.

But the transition to the M-16 is not based solely on the weapons capability. As the rifles are issued to Iraqi soldiers, they will be registered individually -- a measure intended to reduce the number of American weapons being acquired by insurgents.

The new M-16s will also update the Iraqi Army's arsenal, as many of their AK-47s are in varying states of disrepair, military officials said.

On Camp Taji it was all smiles from the Iraqi troops, as the U.S. Soldiers walked them through the basics of firing the M-16.

"For their first time, they shot very well -- even compared to some U.S. Soldiers," said Sgt. Kevin Averre, the noncommissioned officer in charge of the training. Averre is assigned to the Combat Aviation Brigade, 1st Infantry Division, serving as a battle NCO in the brigade's tactical operations center.

In 2003, Averre served with Iraqi Security Forces as an infantryman assigned to the 4th Infantry Division.
Bangkok: Military-ruled Myanmar has begun a nuclear weapons programme with the help of North Korea, according to an investigation Friday, citing a senior army defector and years of "top secret material".

A new documentary shows thousands of photos and defector testimony revealing the junta's nuclear ambitions and a secret network of underground tunnels, allegedly built with help from North Korea, television network Al Jazeera said.

The revelations prompted a US senator to abruptly cancel a trip to Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, and the United States raised fresh concerns about "growing military ties" between the two pariah states.

Norway-based news group Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB), which produced the film, says "evidence of Myanmar's nuclear programme has come from top-secret material smuggled out of the country over several years," Al Jazeera reported.

The years-long investigation included hundreds of files and other evidence from a Myanmar defector, army major Sai Thein Win, who said he was deputy commander of a military factory heading up Myanmar's nuclear battalion.

"They really want to build a bomb. That is their main objective," he is quoted as saying in the film, broadcast by Al Jazeera on Friday.

A senior Myanmar official, asking not to be named, told AFP that the accusations were "groundless", without elaborating.

But the United States said it was worried about the military links between the two nations, said Geoff Morrell, a spokesman for Defence Secretary Robert Gates who is in the region for an Asian security summit.

"We are concerned with growing military ties with the DPRK (North Korea) and are following it closely to ensure that the multiple UNSCRs (UN Security Council resolutions) are enforced," Morrell told AFP in an email.

Morrell did not comment directly on the nuclear allegations.

US Senator
Jim Webb was due to fly to Myanmar on Thursday but said it would be "unwise and potentially counter-productive" until there is further clarification on the suspicions of cooperation with nuclear-armed North Korea.

The findings "contain new allegations regarding the possibility that the Burmese government has been working in conjunction with North Korea in order to develop a nuclear programme," Webb said.

Files reportedly smuggled out of Myanmar by Sai Thein Win have been seen by experts including Robert Kelley, former director of the International Atomic Energy Agency.

"It appears it is a nuclear weapons programme because there is no conceivable use for this for nuclear power or anything like that," he is quoted as saying on Al Jazeera's website.

Myanmar, which has been military ruled since 1962, has previously been accused of violating a UN Security Council ban on North Korean arms exports, which was imposed last June.

Following a visit there in May, US Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Kurt Campbell expressed concern about a suspected arms shipment from North Korea to Myanmar.

He called for a "transparent process" to be put in place as a way for Myanmar to assure the international community of its commitments to the resolution on North Korean arms.

President Barack Obama's administration last year launched a dialogue with Myanmar's military rulers, after concluding that Western attempts to isolate the regime had met with little success.

But Washington has sharply criticised preparations for this year's elections -- the first in 20 years -- as well as raising the nuclear concerns.

USS Enterprise (CVN 65) conducted its first nighttime flight operations in more than two years May 13-14 with elements of Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 1 as the "Big E" completed another milestone toward flight deck certification.

Enterprise has launched more than 60 sorties from the ship's flight deck just 20 days after completing a two-year extended maintenance availability.

Flight deck certification has been conducted aboard Enterprise since May 12 by Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 211, VFA 11, Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 251, and the Air Test and Evaluation Squadron 23.

"We're going to have our varsity team up there tonight," said Enterprise Commanding Officer Capt. O.P. Honors in a message to the crew over the ship's loudspeaker prior to beginning the nighttime event.

Honors cautioned nonessential crew to stay away from the catwalks surrounding the flight deck due to the inherent danger involved in this particular event, but also flight deck operations in general.

Without the aid of moonlight, the squadrons faced additional challenges during these highly complex nighttime maneuvers.

"We call it flying into a black hole," said Lt. Jason M. Simon, a landing signal officer from VFA-211. "The sky is black, the water is black, and the ship is black, and all the pilots have to land on is their instruments. Despite the challenges, the evolution went smoothly thanks to the expertise of the flight deck personnel, the pilots, and the Enterprise crew."

Aircraft carriers launch night sorties routinely, but since this was the first night of flight operations the crew had conducted in so long, everyone aboard felt the added pressure to get it right.

The event was one of the final hurdles the world's first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier faced as it moved closer to flight deck certification and continued to build on its storied history.

Enterprise is underway conducting flight deck certification in preparation for her work-up phase and 21st deployment.



Wow this DISINTEGRATOR Rubber Band Gun takes the cake for the well-built rubber band guns! Build a log and attention to detail is also second to none. Pistol incredible but the view sure helps, the creator of Dunstable, England and the hills you see are the Dunstable Downs.

"Forget the rubber Gatling gun. DISINTEGRATOR is the most incredible rubber band gun ever built, capable of firing more than 40 rounds per second (2400 revolutions per minute) from 24 companies rolling barrels. This is the twin Vulcan cannon of the world rubber gun!"


Think of the electromagnetic railgun as an electric cannon which uses electrical energy instead of chemical propellant to launch projectiles at hypervelocities. First conceived nearly a century ago, the concept was investigated by Germany during WWII, but has really only stepped out of science fiction and into reality in the last 12 months. With shells travelling at Mach 5 on impact, and accurate to within five metres at a 200 mile range, such weapons maximize the damage they do through kinetic energy, and hence don't need explosive payloads. Accordingly, they are ideal for naval warfare as they minimise the risk to warships which do not need to carry explosive warheads or propellants. Earlier this week, the US Office of Naval Research (ONR) awarded a USD 21 million 30-month contract to BAE Systems for the detailed design and delivery of an Innovative Naval Prototype (INP) Railgun. As previously warned, if the Daleks don't get here soon, they'll have a serious fight on their hands.

Under the contract, BAE Systems will develop advanced Railgun technologies including a composite launcher (barrel) that will be demonstrated in 2011. BAE Systems has partnered with IAP Research, and SAIC to develop the Railgun.

 One of the greatest potential advantages for the Railgun program is the safety and logistics aspect.Safety on board ship is increased because no explosives are required to fire the projectile and no explosive rounds are stored in the ship’s magazine.

The technology uses high-power electromagnetic energy instead of explosive chemical propellants (energetics) to propel a projectile farther and faster than any preceding gun. At full capability, the rail gun will be able to fire a projectile more than 200 nautical miles at a muzzle velocity of mach seven and impacting its target at mach five. In contrast, the current Navy gun, MK 45 five-inch gun, has a range of about 13 miles.

Schaum's Outline of Electromagnetics
Introduction to Electromagnetic Compatibility (Wiley Series in Microwave and Optical Engineering)
Electromagnetic Fields: A Consumer's Guide to the Issues and How to Protect Ourselves
Fundamentals of Applied Electromagnetics (6th Edition)
Skylink MC-201 Electro-Magnetic Lock
Electromagnetic Compatibility Engineering
Electromagnetics Explained: A Handbook for Wireless/ RF, EMC, and High-Speed Electronics (EDN Series for Design Engineers)
Bell + Howell Electromagnetic Ultrasonic Pest Repeller
Field and Wave Electromagnetics (2nd Edition)
The Finite Element Method in Electromagnetics
Metal Storm has been granted another round of patents and one in particular has important implications for the future of minefields. The company’s weapon technology functions somewhat like an inkjet printer, using computer-controlled electronic ignition and a system of stacked projectiles in multiple barrels. As each barrel can contain a variety of projectiles, it can fire a sensor from each of the barrels to cover an area with sensors. If any sensor is triggered, the barrel to which it belongs fires a subsequent explosive projectile to the exact same point. The system offers many advantages, including the ability to be switched off leaving no explosive ordnance remaining in the area that had been protected. With landmines being one of the most dreadful and enduring legacies of war, it’s an enormous shame that only one side will be using Metal Storm, as it represents a potential solution to the deployment of this insidious device.

We’ve written many stories about Metal Storm’s non-mechanical weapon technology, its awesome firepower, light weight and inability to jam being just a few of its many advantages.

Metal Storm’s inkjet-like technology can do things your average gun can’t do, like fire a million rounds a minute, or fire different projectiles from the same barrel to different distances.

Newly awarded US Patent No. 7637195 protects Metals Storm’s technology which create a virtual minefield. In particular, it protects the system of deploying multi-barrel weapon systems for set defence where each barrel contains a sensor projectile followed by a series of other projectiles. On deployment, the sensors can blanket a “protected area” and if any sensor is triggered, the barrel to which it belongs fires a subsequent projectile to the exact same point to provide an “effect” at that position.

Just to translate the military terminology, an “effect” can range from lethal through less-lethal, depending on the nature of the expected threat. The system has several key benefits in that it can be deployed over large areas in seconds and provide unmanned defence for extended periods.

Unlike conventional minefields it is “self healing”, in that if an incursion triggers a firing, there would still be more projectiles in each barrel to maintain the protection at that point. Uniquely, the protection can be switched off instantly, either over the entire area or for a path through the area, then switched back on again, and most appealing of all, it does not sew a permanent, death-dealing minefield indiscriminate of civilian populations and soldiers: the system can be instantly removed with no mines or other explosive ordnance remaining in the area that had been protected.
echnical Specifications:
Company Name:Gölcük Naval Shipyard
Ever since the US has started to build the missile shields in Central and Eastern Europe, Russia has been extremely wary and sceptical of the build up. Russia suspects that it might harm its sovereignty and is being seen as an American incursion into areas under Russian influence. NATO believes that the American missile shields are necessary to protect the European nations from aggression of any kind stemming from the East.

NATO certainly does not want t9o antagonize Russia and hence invited Russia to be part of the missile shield program so that they could all create a safe and secure Europe. However, Russia did not take it in the right sense and declared it can’t be suicidal and help the enemies build missile systems in its own backyard.


Russian officials say that in order to cut its strategic arsenal much below the new limit of 1550 deployed weapons, Moscow would have to have guarantees that the US would not develop a strategic missile defence system. The US argument is: we don't need a new ban, we just need transparency to demonstrate the new system is aimed only at Iran. Not good enough, the Russians respond.

That's where it stands now. The missile defence row has been kicked up the road. It hasn't been kicked out of the way.
Mr. Medvedev said new missile technology will be developed in full accordance with any new arms agreements reached with Washington, but that other weapons are necessary.

He says Russia's nuclear shield allows it to solve all the problems, which it has to solve. He says of course Russia will develop new systems, including delivery systems, that is, missiles. He says it is quite normal and that the whole world is doing this.

The Russian leader also praised U.S. President Barack Obama's recent call for a nuclear-weapons-free world, calling it a "beautiful and right goal." But he said movement toward that objective should be gradual and should require other nuclear-armed countries to cut their arsenals as well.

President Medvedev said he is encouraged by the discussions.

He says, anyway we are moving forward very quickly, we have already agreed almost on all issues."

Mr. Medvedev used the TV broadcast to touch on a host of other topics, chief among them the environment and the economy. State-owned media quote the president as saying he is dissatisfied with this month's global-warming summit in Copenhagen, calling it "a lot of hot air." He said Russia will none-the-less continue to push for domestic energy efficiency and cuts in carbon emissions.

The president also said Russia has survived the global economic crisis with no major losses. He said the country could see its gross domestic product grow by 2.5 to five percent in 2010, "in an optimistic scenario."